1875.] THE PHILIPPmE ARCHIPELAGO. 339 



Longitudo 

 aliB. caudx. 



L. cristatus 3-37 3-75 $ adult. Lake Baikal. 



3-37 3-75 s „ 



o ,o 



3-37 3-60 2 „ Siberia (Lake BaikaH). 



3-37 ^ „ Malabar. 



3"37 3-37 2 vel s juv. Coorg. 



3-37 3-87 2 vel s juv. Moulmein, October. 



3-37 3-65 d juv. (_;?(ZeBeavan). Maunbhoom, Dec. 25. 



3-25 3-50 2 „ {fide Beavan). Moulmein, Sept. 



3*37 3"87 J „ Barrackporo, Sept. 23. 



3-13 3"62 2 „ {fide Beavan). Maunbhoom, Jan. 



3-37 3-81 2 adult. Sassowlie. 



3-37 3-87 6 „ Ceylon, December. 



3-37 3-87 2 vel d juv. Ceylon, October. 



3-37 3-16 d adult. Assam. 



3-50 3-62 d „ Tonghoo. 



'to'^ 



La Viegrieclie rouge de Visle Panay, Sonnerat, op. cit. p. 114, pi. 71 ; 



Lanius ruber, Scopoli, torn. cit. no. 14 (1786), ex Sonn. ; 



Lanius panayensis, Gm.* torn. cit. p. 307, no. 41 (1788), ex Sonn.; and 



La Piegrieche blanche de I'isic Panay, Sonnerat, op. cit. p. 115, pi. 72 ; Tr Z S ix 



Lanius albiis, Scopoli, torn. cit. p. 85, no. 15 (1786), ex Sonn. ; p- 174. 



Lanius albus, Gm., torn. cit. p. 307, no. 42 (1788), ex Sonn., 



have never been determined. Bonaparte (Consp. i. p. 364) was unable to suggest an identification ; 

 and in the Hand-list Mr. Gray omitted all the titles founded on Sonnerat's two plates. The 

 seventy-first is possibly meant to represent an African or else Madagascar Ploceine form, perhaps 

 a species of Foudia ; while the species figured in the seventy-second plate, Lanius albus, closely 

 corresponds with Sturiiopastor melanopterus (Daudin). 



ARTAMID.E. 



Aetamus, Vieillot. 

 73. Artamus leucortnus. 



Lanius mamllensis, Briss. Orn. ii. p. 180, no. 17, " Manilla" (1760). 



Lanius leucorynus, Linn., Mantissa Plant, p. 524, "Manilla" (1771), ex Brisson ; Walden, 

 Tr. Z. S. viii. p. 07 f; Kittlitz, Kupfert. pi. 30. fig. 1. 



Lanius phili2)pinus, Scop. Del. 11. Faun. Insubr. ii. p. 85, no. 12 (1780), ex Sonn. 



Hab. Negros, March ; Guimaras, March ; Luzon, January {Meyer). 

 Sexes {fide Meyer) do not differ. 



Messrs. Hartlaub and Finsch (P. Z. S. 1808, pp. 116, 117, no. 5) assert that the Philippines, 

 and more especially the island of Luzon, are inhabited by two distinct species of the genus 



* Gmelin erroneously quotes Sonnerat's 70th plate. t lAntea, p. 168. — Ed.] 



